The poem opened on Friday, August 23 at 12 AM in Brisbane, Australia (UTC+10:00) and closed on Sunday, August 25 at 5:00 PM.

WIHTBOAM was a collaborative poem that you were invited to help write. It's an exquisite corpse with a twist: it steals the form and first line of Elizabeth Bachinsky's "When I Have the Body of a Man", from The Hottest Summer in Recorded History, (Nightwood Editions, 2013), reprinted here with generous permission of the author and publisher:

WHEN I HAVE THE BODY OF A MAN

When I have the body of a man, I have the head of a bull.

When I have the head of a bull, Athena springs from my forehead.

When Athena springs from my forehead, I tell Athena, Cut it out!

When I tell Athena, Cut it out! she makes a string of paper dolls from my money.

When she makes a string of paper dolls from my money, I say Thank you, fold them up, and put them in a drawer.

When I say Thank you, fold them up, and put them in a drawer, the dolls figure out a way to get out and use eBay when I'm not at home.

When the dolls figure out a way to get out and use eBay when I'm not at home, I know I've not had enough to drink.

When I know I've not had enough to drink, I admire my foritude.

When I admire my fortitude, Athena says, Cut it out!

When Athena says, Cut it out! one should always listen.

When one should always listen, I think, Don't tell me what to do with my time!

When I think Don't tell me what to do with my time! I have the body of a man.

In WIHTBOAM, you were invited to contribute a line to a poem, that is prepended by a "When" clause (i.e.
'When I have the body of a man,'). Your line then became the leading "When" clause of the next contributor's line.